Taring Padi - Wayang Kardus Room 1

23.Mar.23 until 24.Mar.23
Targin padi

Indonesian artist collective Taring Padi will work with KASK's students and teachers to produce a series of cardboard puppets in Room 1, which will be carried together from S.M.A.K. to KASK on Friday 24 March at 18:00.

In 2020, during documenta 15 in Kassel, the collective made and presented 1 200 cardboard puppets as part of the presentation of their practice, for which they have been learning from and collaborating with diverse communities for more than 20 years. Taring Padi also used documenta 15 as a platform to campaign on issues of diversity and tolerance and build an international solidarity network.

The art collective Taring Padi was founded in 1998 in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, by a group of progressive art students and activists in response to upheavals during the reform era. Consequently, Taring Padi's artistic practice is always part of socio-political and cultural actions and is in solidarity with a wide range of communities and social movements. Their work focuses on diverse issues such as anti-militarism and neoliberalism; human rights violations, gender equality; environment and social justice, and are expressed through collective works in the form of woodcut posters, large-format banners, cardboard puppets, music, carnival and other progressive art actions.


Why cardboard puppets?

In Indonesian culture, it is traditional to tell stories through puppetry. Taring Padi deploys cardboard puppets as a pragmatic and interactive medium to support activist groups in their struggle against social injustice in their communities. Yustoni Voluntero (1970-2018), one of the founders of Taring Padi, added the ideological element: the cardboard puppet that takes Javanese highbrow art to a grassroots level while maintaining its communicative and entertainment quality.

Cardboard puppets have the advantage of being cheap and light, made of recycled materials and easily available. Crucial factors for reaching many participants. Although they are not resistant to water and heat, their volatile nature is consistent with their purpose: to organise, teach and express artistic ideas. The cardboard puppet becomes the physical manifestation in specific issues: from anti-militarism, anti-corruption, colonisation, environmental destruction, gender equality, LGBTQIA+ rights, human rights, Indonesian mass killings of 1965, anti-racism, refugee crises, indigenous peoples, religious freedom, education for all, Papua, anti-fascism, pandemic to solidarity with victims of violence in Palestine and Myanmar.

This workshop is a collaboration between KASK Lectures, the Master seminar "Film Units and Artists Collectives" under Mohanad Alyacoubi and Nomadic School of Arts. Taring Padi will be present during the project week and will also give a KASK lecture on Thursday 23 March. At the invitation of It's About Time...!, they are developing a workshop for students from all programmes within School of Arts, Hogent.

KASK lecture: Taring Padi (schoolofartsgent.be)
Practical info
  • Thursday 23 March 2023.
  • Friday 24 March, at 18:00 the puppets will be carried to KASK.
  • In Room 1.
  • For KASK students.
All activities
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